Pattingham
Pattingham maps (2 available)
Map of West Midlands
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
See this old map of West Midlands
Personalised maps
Create an historic map centred directly on any postcode!
Pattingham photos (none available)
We have no photos of Pattingham,although these nearby locations do:Pattingham books (17 available)
Coventry Town Walk Guide
Paperback
Dudley Living Memories
Paperback
Wolverhampton Photographic Memories
Paperback
Pattingham memories
Be the first to add a memory of Pattingham.
You can also read memories of nearby places in West Midlands below.
West Midlands memories
Village School
To the left of where the photographer was standing was the junior's playground of the old village school (St Mary and St Margaret's.) In 1963-4 we would have vacated the old buildings and moved into a new building in Southfield Avenue on the Hall Estate. The old school was basically a large room divided into classrooms by immense sliding concertina doors. The windows were very high and so were the ceilings. Because the old school was very cramped just prior to moving to the new one, our class with our teacher Mrs Huggins, had our lessons in two rooms of the old house. I remember immense coal fires in the winter while the rest of the school had hot pipes running ...read more here
A memory of Castle Bromwich contributed by helen kerr
Visits to cathedral
We used to stay one week each summer with my mother's aunt and we would be taken to see the sights of Coventry. I remember so well going into the ruined cathedral and feeling a sense of awe and that it was still a place of worship, albeit open-air. I think it was because the original aisles were still in place and where the pews would have been was grass.
Later on we came to live in Coventry and I have been a member of the Cathedral community. Memorable occasions in the 'old' cathedral have been Easter Sunday services at dawn after having stayed awake (and busy) since the first part of the service the evening before; sponsored sleep-outs overnight (usually ...read more here
A memory of Coventry contributed by josie skene
My parents wedding
Although I wasn't to be born for another 6 years, I remember my mother teling me about her wedding day here. My brother's name is Peter, I wonder if the connection is from this church?
A memory of Wolverhampton contributed by Sarah Hartley
Post Office
We moved to nearby Kingshurst and the Post Office on the corner of Hurst Lane was the nearest for collecting the much needed Family Allowance. It was a good walk as the buses were not very frequent. When I was newly married 13 years later, our first house was in Hawthorne Road so this was my local shopping area. We moved away 33 years ago but having friends who live in Hurst Lane North we do visit the area occasionally. I have experienced many changes to these shops and the now very busy road.
A memory of Castle Bromwich contributed by Lynda Ridgard
Extracts From Pattingham & West Midlands books
Smarts occupies part of a
block known as Bordeaux
House, so named because
when it was built in 1894
it was the home of a
wine importer, Rutlands.
It is now occupied by a
catalogue bargain shop
and a building society,
and the clock has gone.
The buildings on the left
were demolished to make
way for a MacDonald’s
restaurant in 1988.
An extract from from"West Midlands Living Memories".
Here we have another
view of Prince’s Corner
on the right, with a
glimpse of the High
Street beyond the
pseudo-timbering of
The King’s Arms (now
The Fallow and Firkin).
When the roundabout
was built in the 1930s,
it was deemed such a
novelty that it starred
on specially issued
local postcards, the
handsome buildings in
the background playing
only a minor role.
An extract from from"West Midlands Living Memories".
Hardly changed today,
this substantial, good-
looking pub still stands
opposite Prince’s Corner
at the end of the High
Street. This spot has
been the terminus
and turning point for
buses from Birmingham
city centre since the
very first motor buses
to serve Harborne
departed the city in
1903, travelling (as they
still do) via Five Ways
and Edgbaston.
An extract from from"West Midlands Living Memories".
Northfield was founded by Saxon settlers in the fertile valley of the River Rea. The original
village remained agricultural, but a subsidiary settlement grew up on the Bristol road which
had already become a sizeable suburb when Northfield was incorporated into Birmingham in
1911. The last farm in the parish survived until the 1960s, a few years after this view was taken.
An extract from from"West Midlands Living Memories".
The catalyst for the
subsidiary settlement
mentioned in the
caption to N203006
was the building of two
turnpike roads through
Northfield, one of which
was eventually to become
the A38 (Bristol Road).
A large coaching inn
called The Bell was built
at their intersection. The
Bell crossing remains an
important hub today,
and development is
still concentrated along
Bristol Road.
An extract from from"West Midlands Living Memories".





